Exterior
Compact Neo-Classical mansion; principal SE elevation a symmetrically planned 2-storey, 9-window range with central 3-window bowed projection; recessed single-storey wings (c.1830 additions); courtyard to rear bounded by service wings to SW and NE.
Walls of main house faced with limestone ashlar masonry, 1st floor windows with continuous, plain sill band and shallow parapet with moulded cornice; windows are slightly recessed 2-pane sashes, ground floor windows deeper than 1st floor. Shallow, hipped slate roof (central bowed projection with shallow domed roof) with tall rectangular ashlar axial stacks . Side elevations are similarly detailed, of 6-windows; the right (NE) return forms the entrance front, with added, central limestone porch of paired Tuscan columns supporting an embossed frieze and moulded, dentilled cornice. Wings of soft yellow sandstone (added c.1830).
The NE wing, to the right (formerly the aviary, now the billiards room), with ashlar walls, has a stressed moulded and dentilled cornice with shallow parapet, and continuous bevelled plinth. To centre is a slightly advanced entrance of 3-bays; the central bay echoing the design of the NE porch, with French windows between paired columns under friezes depicting cherubs. Flanking bays slightly recessed, each with round-headed recess under a moulded arch with stressed keystone supported on engaged Tuscan pilasters. There is a similarly detailed recess set into the curving, slightly advanced bays at each end of the aviary wing, the moulded capitals of the pilasters extending across the faces of the advanced bays.
The SW wing, to the left (the orangery) comprises 3 pavilions linked by shorter, plainer, recessed blocks, each with square-headed doorway with plain, stressed architrave. The 3 pavilions each have arches echoing those of the NE wing; the central, of 3-bays, with Tuscan pillars between French windows set into each arch; paired Tuscan pilasters at the angles. The left (SW) pavilion has paired arches on Tuscan pillars, paired Tuscan pilasters at the angles; this pavilion is open with seating along the rear wall; the right (NE) bay is similarly detailed but with blocked arches and the whole is raised by one storey to match the construction of the main house. Cornice and parapet detail as for NE wing.
Service wings to rear; main wing to NE end; a 3-storey range contemporary with main house, and similarly detailed; windows arranged symmetrically with floors divided by string courses. Extended (?mid-late C19) with a tall, 3-storey, square-plan block at the far NW end; each side with 4-windows, arranged 1-2-1 and recessed to give the impression of Tuscan pilasters between and at angles, supporting a moulded cornice and shallow parapet. Windows are rectangular 2-pane sashes, 1st floor under lintels with recessed panels with moulded surrounds; similar detailing to recesses without lights in 1st and 2nd floors.
Abutting the SW side of the main service wing is the NE side of the Poultry court, comprising a series of single storey buildings (larders) faced with limestone; the 4-window range at the SE end (in the angle between main house and main service wing) raised to 3 storeys with limestone rubble with ashlar block lintels to ground and first floor windows. Advanced from its right (SE) end is a polygonal, single-storey larder built of snecked limestone masonry (large stones at angles) with a hipped slate roof. To the left (NW) end of the NE side of the Poultry court is a single-storey ashlar building, 3-windows with doorway at far left (NW) end and octagonal pavilion at SW corner, with window to each face. Hipped slate roof, the roof of the octagonal pavilion surmounted by a Coade stone globe finial and the eaves projecting and supported on brackets carried down to wall posts on plain corbels; to the front of the main part of the building is a glass and cast-iron verandah, brackets supported on plain corbels. The floor of the Poultry court is flagged, with steps leading down to a doorway in the low, linking block between the buildings along the NE side of the court.
Along the SW side of the Poultry court is a single storey range (former brewhouse and laundry), built of rubble masonry with limestone and brick dressings. The range has been altered throughout (refurbished 1990). It is linked to the rear of the SW wing of the main house by a low, single-storey, snecked limestone masonry wing; with voussoir lintels over openings, plank doors and casement windows.